This paper considers the opposition within Conservative parliamentary ranks to the decision of the Cameron administration to ring fence spending on overseas development aid (ODA) or international aid. Using documentary analysis from a range of parliamentary debates and divisions in the 2010 to 2015 Parliament, the paper pieces together the arguments against legally enshrining spending on international aid at 0.7 percent of Gross National Income (GNI) made by Conservative parliamentarians. We define each Conservative parliamentarian as either aid critics (voted or spoke out against the 0.7 percent target); aid sceptics (abstained and did not publicly speak out for the 0.7 percent target); and aid advocates (those who voted and spoke out for ...
During 2015 Prime Minister Cameron was under intense domestic and international pressure over his ap...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative–Liberal coalition g...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative-Liberal coalition g...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative Pa...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative P...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative Pa...
Since 2010, successive Conservative-led Coalition and Conservative governments in the UK have impose...
Avery Hancock takes a look at what the election might mean for the UK’s foreign aid contributions. W...
This paper examines the role of humanitarian intervention as a tool of foreign policy in the Conserv...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Resources for foreign aid come under attack when parties that care little for international affairs ...
Aid budgets face immense pressure – despite overseas aid being critical for poverty alleviation in d...
Tim Oliver and Matt Beech contend that the Conservative Party changed its philosophical approach to ...
August 2010, an internal Department for International Development (DFID) paper was leaked that point...
The effectiveness of UK aid spending is reliant on the government’s ability to exercise meaningful o...
During 2015 Prime Minister Cameron was under intense domestic and international pressure over his ap...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative–Liberal coalition g...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative-Liberal coalition g...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative Pa...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative P...
This is the first article to use a detailed dataset of the 2010 - 2015 Parliamentary Conservative Pa...
Since 2010, successive Conservative-led Coalition and Conservative governments in the UK have impose...
Avery Hancock takes a look at what the election might mean for the UK’s foreign aid contributions. W...
This paper examines the role of humanitarian intervention as a tool of foreign policy in the Conserv...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Resources for foreign aid come under attack when parties that care little for international affairs ...
Aid budgets face immense pressure – despite overseas aid being critical for poverty alleviation in d...
Tim Oliver and Matt Beech contend that the Conservative Party changed its philosophical approach to ...
August 2010, an internal Department for International Development (DFID) paper was leaked that point...
The effectiveness of UK aid spending is reliant on the government’s ability to exercise meaningful o...
During 2015 Prime Minister Cameron was under intense domestic and international pressure over his ap...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative–Liberal coalition g...
This article interprets the ideational underpinnings of the British Conservative-Liberal coalition g...